A multi-wavelength observation and investigation of six infrared dark clouds
Chuan-Peng Zhang, Jing-Hua Yuan, Guang-Xing Li, Jian-Jun Zhou, Jun-Jie, Wang

TL;DR
This study uses multi-wavelength observations to analyze six infrared dark clouds, revealing their complex dynamics, chemistry, and the effectiveness of different molecular tracers in dense star-forming regions.
Contribution
It provides new observational data on IRDCs, compares molecular tracers' effectiveness, and supports the envelope expansion with core collapse model for IRDC dynamics.
Findings
N2H+ correlates strongly with dust temperature and density
C18O is less reliable as a dense gas tracer
Active dynamics including infall, outflow, and collapse observed
Abstract
Context. Infrared dark clouds (IRDCs) are ubiquitous in the Milky Way, yet they play a crucial role in breeding newly-formed stars. Aims. With the aim of further understanding the dynamics, chemistry, and evolution of IRDCs, we carried out multi-wavelength observations on a small sample. Methods. We performed new observations with the IRAM 30 m and CSO 10.4 m telescopes, with tracers , HCN, , , DCO, SiO, and DCN toward six IRDCs G031.97+00.07, G033.69-00.01, G034.43+00.24, G035.39-00.33, G038.95-00.47, and G053.11+00.05. Results. We investigated 44 cores including 37 cores reported in previous work and seven newly-identified cores. Toward the dense cores, we detected 6 DCO, and 5 DCN lines. Using pixel-by-pixel spectral energy distribution (SED) fits of the 70 to 500 m, we obtained dust temperature and…
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